For over a year, artist James C. Christensen painted "under the guise" of an obscure,
15th century Flemish painter, best known for, and named after, a multi-paneled masterpiece
called The Enoch Altarpiece. Also known as
Jehovah Teaches Enoch the Plan of Salvation, what remains of The Enoch Alterpiece are the two sides that once flanked the (missing)
center panel. The two angels, who originally were positioned to bless the center scene,
incorporate symbols of God's original plan for man's salvation. With the angel on the
left are fruit and a serpent, representing the Garden of Eden and the fall of man, while
a skull pierced by an Easter Lily appears with the angel on the right, suggesting the
triumph of Christ over death and the redemption of man.

The fact that the center panel is missing is rich with allegory as well. According to
Christensen the missing center panel depicted not only Enoch and Jehovah, but the City of
Enoch as well. Enoch was regarded by God to be so imbued with the Holy Spirit that he
was "translated" or "taken from the earth" rather than suffer physical death. "No one is
certain what happened to the missing center panel of The Enoch Altar Piece, but the hope is,"
says Christensen, with a smile, "it will one day return."

The Enoch Altarpiece is a framed, two-piece canvas
print set. The artisan who created the frames for the original paintings was commissioned
by Greenwich to create two prototypes for this limited edition print set. The elegant
resin-molded frames are distressed and hand-brushed with gold to recreate the look of
15th century art treasures.

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